Penn State says it will respond within days
to the NCAA's demand for information as the governing body decides whether the
university should face penalties after the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse
scandal.
Penn State President Rodney Erickson said
Tuesday he doesn't want to "jump to conclusions" about possible
sanctions after the head of the NCAA declared no penalty was off the table,
including a shutdown of the university's football program.
The NCAA is investigating whether Penn
State lost "institutional control" over its athletic program. The
probe had been on hold while former FBI Director Louis Freeh (LOO'-ee free)
conducted an investigation on behalf of the school.
Freeh's report says late coach Joe Paterno
and three top officials buried allegations against Sandusky more than a decade
ago to protect the university's image. Paterno's family denies that.
Pennell reported from Philadelphia.
Associated Press writer Michelle Smith in Providence, R.I., contributed to this
report.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back
soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.
Joe Paterno's name is losing its luster,
whether it's the tent city outside Beaver Stadium where students camp out for
prime football tickets or the name associated with his alma mater's football
coach job.
"Paternoville" is out, swapped
for "Nittanyville" on Monday. So respected was Paterno that another
university -- Brown, the late coach's alma mater -- had attached his name to
its coaching job. That too ended.
In a matter of months, the once
unimpeachable Paterno name has become an albatross rather than an honor. The
tainted reputation results from a scathing report by former FBI director Louis
Freeh that concluded Paterno helped cover up child sex abuse allegations
against former assistant Jerry Sandusky.
Brown University, in a statement, said that
not only had it removed Paterno's name from its head football coaching position
and a student award, but it was also reviewing whether to remove him from the
school's athletic hall of fame, too.
Paterno graduated from Brown in 1950 and
was inducted to its hall of fame in 1977.
The Freeh report has even tarnished the
bronze statue of Paterno that had been a rallying point for students in the
months since Sandusky's November arrest touched off a scandal as notable for
its breathtaking allegations as its place: Happy Valley.
On Tuesday, a small plane pulled a banner
over State College reading, "Take the statue down or we will." The
plane is licensed to Air America Aerial Ads of Genoa, Ohio. A person who
answered the phone at Air America declined to give his name or identify who
paid for the flight.
Federal Aviation Administration records
show the agency grounded a plane from the same company after it towed banners
taunting Tiger Woods during the 2010 Masters golf tournament.
Nike took Paterno's name off a child care
center on its corporate campus on Thursday, the same day the Freeh report was
released. Company founder Phil Knight -- whose rousing defense of Paterno at a
memorial service after his death drew thunderous applause -- said in statement
that "it appears Joe made missteps that led to heartbreaking consequences.
I missed that Joe missed it."
The halo that had floated above Paterno's
head in a State College mural was removed Saturday. In its place the artist
added a blue ribbon in support of child abuse awareness.
And a Connecticut middle school said it
would paint over its own mural of Paterno.
Although there was some negative reaction
to Paterno immediately after Sandusky's arrest -- the Big Ten dropped Paterno's
name from the conference championship trophy where it had been next to that of
Amos Alonzo Stagg, who won almost 100 fewer games -- the pace has picked up
since the Freeh report was released.
The Paterno statue outside Beaver Stadium
has been a point of much contention. Critics have called for the statue to be
taken down after the Freeh report concluded that Paterno was aware of a 1998
allegations against Sandusky -- in contrast to his grand jury testimony and an
interview given after his firing -- and that he was involved in the decision to
not report a 2001 incident to the authorities even after his superiors had
decided to.
The Freeh report raised the culpability of
Paterno and former university President Graham Spanier to the same level as two
other key figures: former Vice President Gary Schultz and athletic director Tim
Curley.
Both Schultz and Curley await trial on
charges of perjury and failure to report suspected child abuse. A judge on
Monday set an Aug. 16 court date for oral arguments on pretrial motions.
Spanier is not charged.
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